too

Feedly is developing an AI tool to help its users prioritize articles from RSS feeds

Feedly, a popular RSS feed reader with millions of users worldwide, recently announced the creation of a new AI research assistant named Leo. Their goal with Leo is to create an AI with a set of skills that will enable it to better prioritize articles from news feeds.




too

BBB Tips: Be wary of too-personal social media quizzes

With most Americans under orders to stay at home due to the coronavirus pandemic, many people are turning to social media for a fun distraction. Taking a Facebook quiz about how well you know a friend or what character from your favorite TV show best matches your personality may seem like a harmless way to pass the time while quarantined, but it could also give scammers your personal information for nefarious purposes.

Not all social media quizzes are data collection scams, but some quizzes collect personal information by asking questions like: What is your mothers maiden name? or What is the name of the street you grew up on? These are common security questions for banking and credit card accounts. Sharing this information can lead to your accounts being hacked and your personal and financial information being stolen. It also can enable a scammer to impersonate you to your friends and family.

Tips to avoid social media scams:

• Be skeptical. Before you take a quiz, figure out who created it. Is it a brand you trust? Just because something appears to be fun and innocent, doesn’t mean there isn’t an inherent risk.

• Adjust privacy settings. Review your social media accounts privacy settings and be strict about what information you share — and with whom you are sharing it.




too

Social media evolves to warfare tool

Social media has become one of the most important instruments of hybrid warfare which is named the new generation warfare method, said a Turkish digital media researcher.

According to the general definition, hybrid warfare is one of the war strategies that combine political warfare, conventional warfare, irregular warfare, and cyber warfare methods, including fake news, diplomacy, lawfare, and foreign electoral intervention.

In an exclusive interview with Anadolu Agency, Ali Murat Kirik, an academician and expert digital media researcher at Marmara University in Istanbul, increasing activities of perception management and social engineering in social media proves that it is used as a warfare tool.




too

Tootsie: the comedy musical / music and lyrics by David Yazbek ; book by Robert Horn ; based on the story by Don McGuire and Larry Gelbart and the Columbia Pictures motion picture

MEDIA PhonCD Y29 too




too

Web Tools #346 - JS Quiz, Code Editors, React, Testing Tools

Web Tools Weekly

Issue #346 • March 5, 2020

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Be in the Know on Emerging New Trends
Subscribe to our mailing list to receive reports on the latest trends in products, markets, companies, and styles. We constantly analyze over 300,000 blogs, forums, portals and social media accounts to keep track of the emergence of new trends at the earliest stages.
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If you love little JavaScript coding challenges that teach you about the basics of the language, you'll enjoy TypeOfNaN JavaScript Quizzes, a project by Nick Scialli and a number of other contributors.

TypeOfNan JavaScript Quizzes

Even after writing JavaScript for many years, I still find it hard to believe how many of such questions I get wrong. Ultimately, I don't think that matters unless I'm live coding in front of an audience or something. Debugging is part of the workflow so even if we get something subtle wrong initially, we can usually figure out the problem and fix it. What we are aiming for in most cases is an end result, not necessarily a process. But a little quiz like this can definitely enhance your understanding, and that can't hurt!

And if you like interesting little JavaScript tidbits like I often share in this newsletter, don't forget that I've compiled all my previous tutorials with updated demos and code samples in an e-book bundle you can grab from Leanpub.

Now on to this week's tools!

 

Text Editors, IDEs, etc.

Be in the Know on Emerging New Trends
Subscribe to our mailing list to receive reports on the latest trends in products, markets, companies, and styles. We constantly analyze over 300,000 blogs, forums, portals and social media accounts to keep track of the emergence of new trends at the earliest stages. sponsored 

Debug Visualizer
A VS Code extension for visualizing data structures while debugging. Works best with JavaScript/TypeScript. Also tested with C#, Java, and PHP. Works with any language that you can debug in VS Code.

Lens.vim
An automatic window resizing plugin for Vim. Automatically resizes windows when their content exceeds their window dimensions, but does so respecting some minimum and maximum resize bounds.

guijs
A multi-purpose native Windows and Mac app to help you manage your development projects. Has features for projects, package installation, script management, and more.

OpenChakra
Full-featured visual editor and code generator for React using Chakra UI (the React component library).

Autocode
An online IDE for connecting APIs together, for makers and developers alike.

Codecov
A code coverage solution to improve your code review workflow and quality. Provides highly integrated tools to group, merge, archive, and compare coverage reports.

CodeinCloud
Provides managed and dedicated cloud IDEs, hosted private cloud solutions and DevOp pipelines. Users can access on-demand IDEs for development.

Markdown App
Online or native WYSIWYG editor for Markdown for Mac, Windows, and Linux.

iHateRegex
Interactive regex cheatsheet for searching for common or complex regular expression solutions.

Peacock
VS Code plugin to subtly change the color of your workspace. Ideal when you have multiple VS Code instances and you want to quickly identify which is which.

Courses by Wes Bos (Master Packages!) on Sale for $97:
 

Testing and Debugging Tools

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Haxor
Helps you support and learn from developers as they build with your products. See how developers use your product by watching their screens, code changes, and open applications.

Kasaya
A "WYSIWYG" (kind of) scripting language and run-time for browser automation.

Blisk
Now at version 12+. A developer-oriented browser that provides businesses with a development workspace for teams and freelancers to develop and test modern web applications twice as fast.

Hexometer
All-in-one website maintenance and performance monitoring tool that continuously monitors and reports 2800+ data points.

Beautify.log
A Node.js library to beautify console.logs with colors, making them easier to read and more useful.

virtual-module
Evaluate a module in a sandbox with in-memory module resolution.

findead
Dead React components finder to find components no longer in use.

ci-detect
Detect what kind of CI environment the program is in (e.g. Jenkins, GitLab, Netflify, Travis-CI, etc).

Zoya
A highly composable logging library written in TypeScript, used for both client and server applications.

React Tools

>&campaign_id=f4daed5baf&device=desktop&v=0.14" style="padding-bottom: 12px;max-width: 568px;border: 0;height: auto;line-height: 100%;outline: none;text-decoration: none;-ms-interpolation-mode: bicubic;" width="568">

Edtr.io
A customizable edit-in-place WYSIWYG component for enabling user-editable pages in React.

resourcerer
Declarative data-fetching and caching framework for REST APIs with React.

react-typical
React typing animation in ~400 bytes of JavaScript.

React Tiny Fab
A tiny (~700 byte gzip'd) WAI-ARIA compliant floating action button for React. The home page has the button working in the bottom right corner if you want to see what this does.

react-roughviz
a thin React wrapper around roughViz, the library for creating sketchy/hand-drawn styled charts in the browser.

react-ga
A JavaScript module that can be used to include Google Analytics tracking code in a website or app that uses React for its front-end codebase.

React Awesome Slider
React content transition slider. A 60fps, lightweight, performant component that renders an animated set of production-ready general purpose sliders.

React Tippy
A lightweight tooltip library for React based on Tippy.js and powered by Popper.js.

react-adal
Azure Active Directory Library (ADAL) support for React.

iframe-resizer-react
The official React interface for iFrame Resizer, a library that auto-resizes height and width of same- and cross-domain iframes to fit their contained content.

React Puzzle Confirm
This is kind of odd. It's a modal to "confirm" (kind of like a captcha) by fitting a puzzle piece using a slider.
 

A Tweet for Thought

According to reports, Corona beer sales are not down due to confusion with Coronavirus (despite some false claims). But I did like this tweet by Kelly Vaughn on that subject.
 

Got a Tool Suggestion?

Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email.
 

Before I Go...

Speaking of code editors, Codewerks is a new project that is running a Kickstarter for "software using a streamlined iPad interface that gives you all the flexibility of a Linux machine."

Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading!

Keep tooling,
Louis
webtoolsweekly.com
@WebToolsWeekly
PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly
WTW on YouTube




too

Web Tools #347 - JS Testing, Media Tools, Git/CLI Tools, Uncats

Web Tools Weekly

Issue #347 • March 12, 2020

The following intro is a paid product review for Wallaby, a developer productivity tool that runs your JavaScript and TypeScript tests immediately as you type.

Code testing is a huge part of the current JavaScript landscape, so if it's crucial that you run tests on your code base regularly, you'll love Wallaby. Wallaby is available as an extension for VS Code, JetBrains Editors, Visual Studio, Sublime Text, and Atom. I'll demonstrate here how powerful Wallaby is by showing you how it works within VS Code.

Once you've installed and configured Wallaby, you can open any project and run it via its Command Palette, shown here:

 
Wallaby's Command Palette in VS Code


When you choose the Start command, you can open any JavaScript or TypeScript file and you'll see something like the following:

 
Wallaby's code coverage and logs


Notice a few things:
 

  • The colored squares on the left indicate code coverage. These squares can be grey, yellow, green, pink, or red, indicating various levels of coverage from your tests.
  • The lines that contain console.logs have their outputs displayed to the right. These get updated in real time as you write or edit your code (similar to Quokka.js, another tool by the same developers that I've reviewed previously)


As you can see, if you're accustomed to using a lot of console.logs and adding breakpoints to your code, Wallaby is going to dramatically increase your productivity. You get that feedback immediately within the code, without actually executing it in a browser or other environment. In other words, your code editor is the console, with the bonus of everything displaying in its immediate code context.

When it's running, Wallaby displays the number of failed and passed tests in the status bar:
 

Wallaby displays passed/failed tests in the status bar


Clicking on the failed and passed tests in the status bar will open Wallaby's Output Channel, with a little more detail on what's happening with your tests:

 
Wallaby's Output Panel


One of the features that has caught the attention of many developers is Wallaby's Time Travel Debugger, which was added to Wallaby in December. This feature allows you to move forward or backwards through your code to understand what led to a specific bug.

 
Wallaby's Debugger View


You can start the debugger on a line of code where your test begins, or on any line executed by one of your tests. Once begun, you can run a number of different commands to get to the root of a particular issue. This is helped out by the Debugger View that opens in the left panel. Pretty powerful! And again, part of the power is that this is all available right inside your code base – no need to open up a separate environment like the developer tools in your browser.

There's a lot more to Wallaby that I haven't mentioned here, but this should be enough to give you a taste of some of the primary features of the tool, which is free to try. Check out the docs for more on what I've only briefly touched on here.

Now on to this week's tools!

 

Media Tools (SVG, Video, etc)

Iconset
Free, cross-platform SVG icon organizer app for designers, developers or product teams. Works on both Mac and Windows.

Open Peeps
A hand-drawn illustration library to create scenes of people, each drawing available in PNG or SVG format.

Cosha
JavaScript utility to add colored shadows to your images. Use via defaults or customize via the API.

Filmage Screen
Screen recorder and video editor for Mac. All-in-one video toolbox that lets you record HD video, edit video, make animated GIFs, convert video, and more.

Biteable
Video making platform with ready templates for creating marketing videos for different social platforms, industries, etc.

Unscreen
Online tool that uses AI to remove the background from an uploaded video.

SequenceDiagram.org
Online tool to build sequence diagrams using a drag-and-drop interface, useful for presentations.

Faux Code Generator
Input real code via a Gist URL and this tool will produce an SVG version of the code in a mock format, for possible use in slides, etc.

Smithsonian Open Access
Download, share, and reuse millions of the Smithsonian’s images. Use in commercial projects without attribution or written permission (although you should read the FAQ for copyright considerations).

Panolens.js
Flexible, event-driven, WebGL-based JavaScript panorama viewer built on Three.js.

Fontice.com
Fastest browser-based WebP converter. Free JPG/PNG to WebP conversion without uploading to any other servers.

Heroicons
A set of free MIT-licensed high-quality SVG icons for UI development

Git, GitHub, and CLI Tools

React Chat Tutorial
Quickly build chat leveraging Stream's Chat API. Our comprehensive React components will get you up and running fast.  sponsored

CLUI
A collection of JavaScript libraries for building command-line interfaces with context-aware autocomplete.

actions-comment-run
GitHub action to execute any script in an issue or pull request comment.

tickgit
Allows you to do project management in your codebase with TODO comments.

grep.app
Search across a half million Git repos, with options for case sensitivity, regex, and whole words only.

GitHub Data
Populate data from GitHub into Figma mockups.

GitHub CLI
In case you missed it, this is GitHub's official command line tool.

Octomments
GitHub issues as a comment plugin.

Gitpod
Launches ready-to-code dev environments for your GitHub or GitLab project with a single click.

GistPad
VS Code extension for managing and sharing code snippets, notes and interactive samples using GitHub Gists.

paint-github
This is kind of humourous. It's a Chrome or Firefox extension that adds a feature to GitHub comments that lets you "draw" your comment.

The Uncategorizables

React Chat Tutorial
Quickly build chat leveraging Stream's Chat API. Our comprehensive React components will get you up and running fast.  sponsored

Outgrow
Platform to build interactive content like calculators, quizzes, chatbots, surveys, and more, for marketing purposes.

unavatar
API that searches common social media platforms to get a user's avatar image by means of a username.

Voiceflow
Design, prototype and build voice apps. Collaboratively design, prototype, and build Alexa Skills and Google Actions, without coding.

Limio
Sell subscriptions and recurring products, build landing pages, checkouts, self-service portals, and more, with no code.

ResponseVault
Alpha. Create a database application with a drag and drop form builder. Import your own JavaScript UI widgets.

Awesome JS
A visual tool to look for popular JavaScript packages, categorized.

Advanced App Development Cost Calculator
Seems to be mainly for large corporate apps because the estimated prices are fairly high.

Nots.io
Documentation tool for development teams. Access docs from your code and always know if something is obsolete.

Opensource Buiders
Find open-source alternatives for your favorite apps.

damnshort
Short dot-com names, suitable for branding, available for sale for $195 each.

A Tweet for Thought

I think it's safe to say many of us are punk rock programmers.
 

Send Me Your Tools!

Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email.
 

Before I Go...

If you love numbers and Math, you'll adore MetaNumbers. It's an encyclopedia providing all sorts of super-boring info on any positive integer you enter. To me this is kind of like Brian Regan's comedy bit on refrigerators, but I know a lot of you might find it interesting.

Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading!

Keep tooling,
Louis
webtoolsweekly.com
@WebToolsWeekly
PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly




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Web Tools #348 - Remote Work, CSS Tools, React, Build Tools

Web Tools Weekly

Issue #348 • March 19, 2020

Advertisement via Syndicate
Have Happier, More Productive Video Meetings
Team.video makes it easier and faster for remote teams to work together by offering user friendly video meetings with agendas, collaborative notes, and emoji responses. No download required and it’s free to use.
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What's happening around the world right now is unprecedented, but I don't think I have to tell you that. Wherever you are, I hope you and our family members are healthy and I hope you've been able to continue some semblance of work, assuming you're able to do your job remotely, as most developers probably are.

I think most of us that didn't previously work remotely will be looking for or recommending new tools for our remote teams, and even the occasional article on remote work life and work culture will be greatly beneficial.

Productivity is essential during the current pandemic

Over the past year, I've been curating a second newsletter that you might enjoy if you've been newly converted to remote work. It's called Tech Productivity, and it's always a brief newsletter with about 10-12 links that include productivity-related tools (like video conferencing, Slack plugins, note taking apps, etc.) as well as productivity-related articles.

Some of the articles cover things like brain science while others are just simple tip-based posts on freelancing and working on side projects. Basically, any kind of content that can help tech workers be more productive. And if you're missing the "productivity tools" category that I used to include in this newsletter, well those tools are now in Tech Productivity, so this one can stay focused on developer-related tools.
 

Now on to this week's tools!
 

CSS and HTML Tools

Have Happier, More Productive Video Meetings
Team.video makes it easier and faster for remote teams to work together by offering user friendly video meetings with agendas, collaborative notes, and emoji responses. No download required and it’s free to use.   via Syndicate

Remake
A framework to build web apps and prototypes using nothing but HTML. Editable areas, sortable items, sign-up/log in functionality, and more.

Aeon
A lightweight date time picker built with web components that can be used anywhere.

Selectors Explained
Interactive online tool to translate CSS selectors into plain English.

Utopia
A one-stop resource for implementing fluid responsive designs, allowing you to elegantly scale type and space without breakpoints.

Neumorphism.io
Generate CSS for elements that have 'soft UI' (i.e. 3D box shadows and lighting).

PurgeCSS
Now at version 2+. Too to remove unused CSS as part of your development workflow.

Leonardo
Generate colors based on a desired contrast ratio.

Tailwind Colors
Color configuration tool for Tailwind CSS, the popular CSS utility framework.

FasterChrome
A Chrome extension that implements instant.page, the popular link pre-loading library, to make page loads and navigation feel faster.

Generate Color
Simple online tool to generate a graduated color palette from one or two predefined color.

React Tools

Tech Productivity Newsletter
A brief newsletter featuring tools and articles for remote work, work culture, learning science, and more – all to help you be more productive.   promoted 

usePlaceCage
A React hook for placecage.com, the image placeholder service that inserts images of, you guessed it, Nicolas Cage.

React Query Devtools
Debugging tool for React Query, the library of React hooks for fetching, caching, and updating asynchronous data in React.

Venti
A global state solution for React.

React Nice Dates
A responsive, touch-friendly, and modular date picker library.

React Google Static Maps
A React wrapper for Google's Static Maps API.

Craft.js
In Beta. A React framework for building powerful and feature-rich drag-n-drop page editors.

react-suspense-fetch
A primitive library for React Suspense Render-as-You-Fetch.

Drab
A React CLI that makes it easier to do monotonous tasks like creating a component or page with styles, creating a service, or creating a hook.

use-axios-client
Make requests with Axios (the promise-based HTTP client for the browser and node) using React hooks.

use-tensorflow
A React hook for TensorFlow.js (the JavaScript library for machine learning to detect objects and poses easily.

Build Tools, Bundlers, etc.

Tech Productivity Newsletter
A brief newsletter featuring tools and articles for remote work, work culture, learning science, and more – all to help you be more productive.   promoted 

esbuild
An extremely fast JavaScript bundler and minifier. Built with Go, but I don't believe that is a barrier to entry for those who don't use Go.

Create Next App
The easiest way to create a React app with server-side rendering via Next.js.

Yarn
The popular package manager alternative to npm is now at version 2+.

why-npm-i-so-long
A small utility to help troubleshoot when installing npm dependencies takes a long time.

vue-loader
A webpack loader for Vue single-file components.

svelvet
A CLI Svelte compiler and watcher that works with Snowpack, the popular build tool.

one-click.js
One click, offline, CommonJS modules in the browser.

Gasket
Framework maker for JavaScript applications, building and scaffolding boilerplate as well as essential elements for libraries and layers of apps to integrate together during runtime.

antd-dayjs-webpack-plugin
A webpack plugin for Day.js, the immutable date library alternative to Moment.js.

shoulders
Quickly view a list of open issues for the open-source packages that your project depends on.

A Tweet for Thought

As Kelly Vaughn points out, the current pandemic might lead to some interesting new changes to the work force, even after things have improved and things start running normally again.
 

Send Me Your Tools!

Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email.
 

Before I Go...

With some extra home time nowadays, you might enjoy Radiooooo, the musical time machine.

Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading!

Keep tooling,
Louis
webtoolsweekly.com
@WebToolsWeekly
PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly




too

Web Tools #349 - DOM Snippets, Front-end Frameworks, Media, Uncats

Web Tools Weekly

Issue #349 • March 26, 2020

Advertisement via Syndicate
Have Happier, More Productive Video Meetings
Team.video makes it easier and faster for remote teams to work together by offering user friendly video meetings with agendas, collaborative notes, and emoji responses. No download required and it’s free to use.
Try Team.video for FREE!

Although I often include quick DOM scripting tips in the intro of this newsletter, for this week, I'm just going to point you to a great little resource that was sent to me by reader Phuoc Nguyen:

It's more or less a repository of basic, intermediate, and advanced native DOM scripting snippets.
 
HTML DOM: A resource of native DOM snippets

Here are some of the advanced and intermediate examples:
  • Make a draggable element
  • Resize columns of a table
  • Sort a table by clicking its headers
  • Calculate the size of the scrollbar
  • Communicate between an iframe and parent window
There are more than 80 tips currently listed and I'm sure he'll add more later. Even if you don't necessarily use any of the snippets in a real project right away, there are plenty of little coding tidbits you can glean form the example code, which is all just vanilla JavaScript with no library or framework involved.

So check out HTML DOM, I'm sure you'll have lots to investigate!
 

Now on to this week's tools!
 

Front-end Frameworks

Have Happier, More Productive Video Meetings
Team.video makes it easier and faster for remote teams to work together by offering user friendly video meetings with agendas, collaborative notes, and emoji responses. No download required and it’s free to use.   via Syndicate

chakra-ui-vue
A set of accessible and composable Vue components that you can use to build your favourite applications and sites.

Pixel Lite
A beautifully crafted, responsive UI kit based on Bootstrap 4 that includes 100 components, 3 plugins, and 3 example pages.

next-typescript-materialui-jest-starter
Very opinionated starter boilerplate for projects based on Next.js, setup with Typescript, Material-UI, and Jest.

React SaaS Template
Template for building a SaaS app or admin website using React + Material-UI.

web3-react
A simple, extensible, dependency-minimized framework for building modern Ethereum decentralized apps.

Tailwind UI
A UI components library, crafted by the creators of Tailwind CSS.

neo.mjs
A Web Workers-driven UI framework.

LitElement
A simple base class for creating fast, lightweight web components. Makes it easy to define web components – ideal for building a UI design system.

Ionic React
React version of Ionic Framework. 100+ mobile optimized React UI components. Standard React tooling with react-dom.

Accessible Components
Scott O'Hara's repo that lists all the accessible widgets and components he's built.

StarAdmin
A free responsive admin template built with Bootstrap 4.

Media Tools

Tech Productivity Newsletter
A brief newsletter featuring tools and articles for remote work, work culture, learning science, and more – all to help you be more productive.   promoted 

Croppola
Upload a photo and this tool will use AI to crop the photo for you automatically, or you can crop it manually and download the result.

Image to Colors
Online tool that extracts colors from any photo on upload.

Nuxt Optimized Images
Automatically optimizes images used in Nuxt.js projects (JPEG, PNG, SVG, WebP and GIF).

Twilio Video React App
Demonstrates a multi-party video application built with twilio-video.js and Create React App.

react-particle-image
React component to render images as interactive particles. There's an interactive demo using the React logo that's pretty cool.

CoreUI Icons
Premium designed free icon for web and mobile, available in SVG, webfont, and raster formats.

DotMatrix.js
A small, performant class-based, dot matrix library with animated movements that respond to mouse/touch events.

react-calendar-heatmap
A calendar heatmap component built on SVG, inspired by GitHub’s commit calendar graph.

Chessboard Image
Modify chess pieces on a virtual chess board, to create chess positions, then download the image for use wherever you want. Might be cool for a chess tutorial website or blog.

Video Language
A language for making movies. Combines the power of a traditional video editor with the capabilities of a full programming language.

The Uncategorizables

Tech Productivity Newsletter
A brief newsletter featuring tools and articles for remote work, work culture, learning science, and more – all to help you be more productive.   promoted 

Mailcoach
A self-hosted email list manager. It integrates with services like Amazon SES, Mailgun, Postmark, or Sendgrid to send out mailings affordably.

Backstage
Open-source developer portal that puts the developer experience first by means of a a unified front end for all your infrastructure tooling.

dstack.ai
Collaborative data exploration. Enables individual data scientists and their teams to publish, share, and track data visualizations.

TAGX
Allows you to create video highlights and annotate the interesting parts of a video. Enter a YouTube, Vimeo, or direct video link to start annotating.

cs.opensource.google
A search engine to search Google's open source projects (Angular, Dart, Flutter, Go, etc).

Cotter
One-click secure phone number login for your apps.

Phrase
Automate localization processes. Edit language files online with your team of translators or order translations into more than 60 languages.

It's a Live
Lets you mimic a live coding presentation by prerecording the presentation, which gets triggered by random keystrokes as if you were really coding.

EasyCSV
Import spreadsheets into your App, Zapier, Google Sheets, Salesforce, or any public API in minutes.

Pico
Platform to create paywalled content, subscriptions, newsletters, etc.

A Tweet for Thought

This underappreciated Tweet by Adam Greenough should be the dev-related Tweet of the year.
 

Send Me Your Tools!

Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email.
 

Before I Go...

If you've got a lot of extra time at home (and you should!) you might like Codepip. There you'll find a number of different interactive online games that teach you various aspects of front-end development.

Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading!

Keep tooling,
Louis
webtoolsweekly.com
@WebToolsWeekly
PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly




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Web Tools #350 - JS Libraries, Testing Tools, Site Builders

Web Tools Weekly

Issue #350 • April 2, 2020

Advertisement via Syndicate
Working From Home? Try Team.Video
Team.video makes it easier and faster for remote teams to work together by offering user friendly video meetings with agendas, collaborative notes, and emoji responses. No download required and it’s free to use.
Try Team.video for FREE!

If you've never looked into using the HTML Drag and Drop API, I've created a super simple code example that uses the least code possible to demonstrate how simple it is to allow one element to be dragged into another one on a web page.

First, here's the HTML:

<div id="box" draggable="true"></div>
<div id="dropzone"></div>

Notice the draggable attribute set to true, and the IDs that I'll use as hooks in the JavaScript. Here's the JavaScript:

let box = document.getElementById('box'),
    dropzone = document.getElementById('dropzone');

dropzone.addEventListener('dragover', function (e) {
  e.preventDefault();
});

dropzone.addEventListener('drop', function (e) {
 
e.target.appendChild(box);
});

Here I'm listening for the dragover and drop events to ensure that the element gets moved properly. The move itself is accomplished using the well-known appendChild() method.

And that's it! Aside from the variable declarations, it's just 6 lines of JavaScript. This code on its own isn't going to do a whole lot. All it does is drag the 'box' element into the 'dropzone' element.

You can see this in action in this CodePen demo, which also includes a little extra code that does the following:

  • Adds some styles to indicate that the box is draggable and that the dropzone is being dragged over
  • Listens for the dragend event to remove styles indicating that the box is draggable and disables the 'dragged over' styles
  • Switches the draggable attribute to false
There's a lot more that I could discuss about the API but this should suffice to give you a starting point, after which you can use a resource like the one on MDN to go deeper.
 

Now on to this week's tools!
 

JavaScript Libraries and Frameworks

Working From Home? Try Team.Video
Team.video makes it easier and faster for remote teams to work together by offering user friendly video meetings with agendas, collaborative notes, and emoji responses. No download required and it’s free to use.   via Syndicate

p5.js
Now at version 1+. JavaScript library for creative coding, with a focus on making coding accessible and inclusive for artists, designers, educators, and beginners.

Hex Engine
A modern 2D game engine for the browser, written in TypeScript and designed to feel similar to React.

LInQer
The C# Language Integrated Queries ported for JavaScript for amazing performance.

Type Route
A flexible, type safe routing library, built on top of the same core library that powers React Router.

Angular
The popular framework is now a version 9.

Mirage JS
An API mocking library that lets you build, test and share a complete working JavaScript application without having to rely on any back-end services.

Solid
A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces that doesn't use a virtual DOM.

Alpine.js
A rugged, minimal framework for composing JavaScript behavior in your markup.

BlockLike.js
An educational JavaScript library that bridges the gap between block-based and text-based programming.

Testing and Debugging Tools

Beginner JavaScript by Wes Bos is 50% Off!
The master package includes 88 HD videos, part of 15 modules – and course updates are free forever.   promoted 

Screenshot Cyborg
Take a full-page screenshot of a webpage, up to 50 URLs at once. Choose to render the screenshot for desktop, tablet, or phone.

Stryker Mutator
A testing toolkit for JavaScript (also Scala and C#) that uses mutation testing, which means tests are run after bugs, or mutants, are automatically inserted into your code.

Cypress
Now at version 4+. Fast, easy, and reliable end-to-end testing for anything that runs in a browser.

Color Contrast Checker
Online tool that analyses and suggests colors that meet the required contrast ratio. Creates shareable links for chosen contrast checks.

LeakLooker X
Discover, browse and monitor database or source code leaks.

Animockup
Online prototype/animation tool to create animated mockups in your browser and export as video or animated GIF.

single-spa Devtools Inspector
A Firefox/Chrome devtools extension to provide utilities for helping with applications using single-spa (framework for front-end microservices).

micro-jaymock
Tiny API mocking microservice for generating fake JSON data.

The Contrast Triangle
Tool for simultaneously checking text, link, and background contrast. This one also has shareable links for specific tests.

Shieldfy
Automated security assistant that integrates with GitHub to show you potential vulnerabilities in your code.

puppeteer-in-electron
Use puppeteer to test and control your Electron application.

Site Builders, CMS's, Static Sites, etc.

Advanced React & GraphQL by Wes Bos is 50% Off!
The master package includes 68 HD videos, part of 10 modules – and course updates are free forever.   promoted 

LiveCanvas
Pure HTML and CSS WordPress builder that uses Bootstrap 4 and helps pages achieve better SEO results.

React Blog
A blogging system built on React where the blog posts are individual GitHub issues.

Calcapp
A cloud-based app designer enabling you to create apps without having to do any programming.

Factor JS
A JavaScript CMS platform that lets you build powerful and professional JavaScript applications fast.

NoCo
Enterprise-grade, no-code platform for Node or React developers. Generate code for most of your app, and only write the parts that make your product unique.

Sitebot
Create a personal website in a few minutes by just chatting. Seems to require Facebook Messenger login.

Webcodesk
A powerful visual development tool for building React apps. It's tightly coupled to the React API, so the knowledge translates directly.

BuilderX
A browser based design tool that codes React Native and React for you.

gatsby-plugin-next-seo
A plug-in that makes managing your SEO easier in Gatsby projects.

lego
A fast static site generator that generates optimised, performant websites.

Kodular
A drag-and-drop no-code app builder.

A Tweet for Thought

This thread establishes that password strength indicators are flawed.
 

Send Me Your Tools!

Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email.
 

Before I Go...

If a tech conference that you were going to attend has been cancelled, you might want to check out 40 Conferences Gone Virtual, by Spokable, which is tracking which conferences are happening online.

Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading!

Keep tooling,
Louis
webtoolsweekly.com
@WebToolsWeekly
PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly




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Web Tools #351 - JS Utilities, Media Tools, Uncategorizables

Web Tools Weekly

Issue #351 • April 9, 2020

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Last week I covered a really simple introduction to the HTML Drag and Drop API, for those of you who have never used it before. The demo has the minimum code required to produce a drag and drop example. Let's take that a little further and incorporate the dataTransfer object, which has methods and properties that can be used in the midst of a drag and drop operation.

First, I can use the setData() method of the dataTransfer object, which I'll incorporate in the midst of my event listener when listening for a dragstart event (an event I didn't need to use in the previous demo). The relevant line looks something like this (where "e" is the event object):

e.dataTransfer.setData('text/html', box.innerHTML)

As you can see, the setData() method takes two arguments: The data type and the data itself. In this case, the data is simply the innerHTML of the dragged element. This is the first step in transferring data: Setting the data, which happens when the element is initially dragged.

The next key line in my code will be using the getData() method. In this case, I'll use it when the drop event is triggered on my drop area element:

this.style.background = e.dataTransfer.getData('text/html')

The data that I'll be grabbing is text that represents a valid CSS color keyword, which will be inside each draggable element. The data could be a lot of things, but in this case I'm just using some text for demo purposes. And as you can see, the text sets the background color of the drop area element.

See the full working demo here

There's naturally a lot more code there, but it's fairly straightforward. I'm looping over the draggable boxes to add the event listeners to each one. The setData() and getData() methods are used within that loop to obtain and apply the color info.

Try dragging any of the boxes into the drop area to see the background of the drop area change. You can even try changing the HTML to use different colors (any valid CSS color value will work). As long as the color is valid, the background of the drop area element will change to that color.

And that's a basic way to use the dataTransfer object when working with the Drag and Drop API.
 

Now on to this week's tools!
 

JavaScript Utilities

Working From Home? Try Team.Video
Team.video makes it easier and faster for remote teams to work together by offering user friendly video meetings with agendas, collaborative notes, and emoji responses. No download required and it’s free to use.   via Syndicate

Van11y
Bit of an older project that I just discovered. A collection of customizable, accessible scripts for rich interface elements, built using progressive enhancement.

Rsup Progress
A simple progress bar with promises support.

Heapify
A very fast JavaScript priority queue, implemented using a binary heap, with no dependencies.

Nano Events
Simple and tiny (72 bytes) event emitter library for JavaScript.

Chardin.js
Simple overlay instructions for your apps. Kind of like those 'app tour' plugins, but just a single overlay pointing stuff out.

Serialize JavaScript
Serialize JavaScript to a superset of JSON that includes regular expressions and functions.

FullCalendar
A JavaScript calendar plugin, great for displaying events with drag-and-drop capabilities and an API for extending its functionality.

defu
Utility to recursively assign default properties.

Clack
A modern keyboard shortcut library written in Typescript.

Sharect.js
A lightweight (2.9Kb gzipped and minified) JavaScript library to let users share text selections to social networks in desktop browsers (like Medium).

Uppload
A better JavaScript image uploader. Highly customizable with 30+ plugins, open-source, and can be used with any file uploading back end.

Media Tools (SVG, Video, Audio, etc.)

Beginner JavaScript by Wes Bos is 50% Off!
The master package includes 88 HD videos, part of 15 modules – and course updates are free forever.   promoted 

mediasoup
Cutting-edge WebRTC video conferencing. The perfect choice for building multi-party video conferencing and real-time streaming apps.

gifcap
Create animated GIFs in your browser from a screen recording. Client-side only, no data is uploaded.

Tabler Icons
A set of over 400 free MIT-licensed high-quality SVG icons for you to use in your web projects. Each icon is designed on a 24x24 grid and a 2px stroke.

Video Puppet
Using a markdown file, create a video (with captions) from a chosen set of images, audio files and smaller video clips.

Exifr
The fastest and most versatile JavaScript EXIF reading library.

Seamless Pattern Generator
Create seamless, repeatable royalty free patterns for your website, or to download as SVG, JPEG or PNG.

Resoundly
Produce a podcast simply by typing the content and this app will convert it to speech.

Spline
Easily create 3D web experiences without coding. Build and iterate fast with production-ready results.

Photo Stream
Self-hosted, super simple photo stream. Built with Ruby and seems to require either Netlify or Jekyll.

Ionicons
Premium designed icons for use in web, iOS, Android, and desktop apps. Support for SVG and web font.

The Uncategorizables

Advanced React & GraphQL by Wes Bos is 50% Off!
The master package includes 68 HD videos, part of 10 modules – and course updates are free forever.   promoted 

Brim
Desktop application to efficiently search large packet captures and logs from Zeek (the network security monitoring tool).

StartNames
Produces brandable ideas for domain names in a Twitter stream, based on actual domains that are for sale.

WMS Everywhere
Chrome extension to help you research search volume, advertising cost per click, and related keywords inside Google search results – free and on-demand.

PDF.js Express
Add a PDF.js viewer with out-of-the-box annotation, PDF form fill, and signing. Based on Mozilla's PDF.js (for parsing and rendering PDFs).

AsyncAPI
Open source tools to easily build and maintain your event-driven architecture. All powered by the AsyncAPI specification, the industry standard for defining asynchronous APIs.

Weglot
Allows you to make your website multilingual in minutes and to manage all your translations effortlessly.

Our Site Updates
An easy way to post updates to your website (e.g. via easy to install banners) and keep visitors informed.

RightFont
An innovative, beautiful and professional font manager app for Mac, helping designers preview, install, sync, and manage their font files.

PingPong
Remote user interviews and user tests made simple.

Extract Article Text
Lets you easily extract boilerplate-free text from news articles, blogs, press releases, and company pages with a single API request.

Commerce
Drop‑in e‑commerce for any website with a single line of code. Serverless, real‑time, and API‑first.

A Tweet for Thought

When you're living in a tech bubble like many of us are, it's hard to believe there are people this naive.
 

Send Me Your Tools!

Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email.
 

Before I Go...

This is amazing: Open and Shut lets you send messages in Morse code by repeatedly slamming your laptop shut. So if you've been kidnapped and forced to give up all your passwords or something...?

Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading!

Keep tooling,
Louis
webtoolsweekly.com
@WebToolsWeekly
PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly




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Web Tools #352 - CSS Tools, JS Utilities, Build Tools

Web Tools Weekly

Issue #352 • April 16, 2020

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Continuing on the theme of dealing with HTML's Drag and Drop API, another thing you're able to do with this API is set a custom image that appears during any drag operation.

Normally when you drag a draggable element, the browser will by default display a mini version of the dragged object, which appears next to the user's cursor. In most cases, this is acceptable and is probably the desired behavior. But if you want you can change that image using the setDragImage() method of the dataTransfer object.

Here's the code:

let img = new Image();
img.src = 'my-image.png';

box.addEventListener('dragstart', function (e) {
  e.dataTransfer.setDragImage(img, 92, 92);
});

Notice a few things:

  • I'm creating an image using the Image() constructor. I could also use document.createElement('img') for this
  • I'm setting the image's src attribute to point to my image
  • I'm using setDragImage() inside the event listener for the dragstart event
The setDragImage() method takes three arguments, all mandatory:
  • The image to use during the drag operation
  • The horizontal (x) offset relative to the mouse pointer
  • The vertical (y) offset relative to the mouse pointer
View this in action on CodePen

In my CodePen example, I'm using a portion of the Web Tools Weekly newsletter header/logo as the drag image. I'm also ensuring that the mouse pointer is centered over the image by using x/y coordinates equal to half the image's dimensions.

Of course, in this example, the image isn't relevant to the drag operation, so there's no image appearing in the drop zone or anything like that. This is just a simple example that shows you how to change the drag image during a drag operation.

Now on to this week's tools!
 

CSS and HTML Tools

Real-Time Chat at Your Fingertips
Stream Chat offers a variety of SDKs and pre-built components to help integrate real-time chat and messaging into your application in as little as a couple of days. Sign up now for a free 28-day trial – no credit card required.  via Paved 

CSS Scan
Now at version 2. Chrome or Firefox extension. An alternative to using inspect element to edit and debug CSS. Check the CSS of any element on hover, instantly, and copy its entire rules with a single click.

CSS Color Gradient Generator
Customize your own gradient or choose a gradient from a predefined gallery.

Color Ninja
A color palette and color scheme manager for Mac.

BEM Naming Cheat Sheet
A nicely designed guide to using the BEM naming method for your stylesheets.

sass-link
Use SCSS almost like regular CSS. It parses the link and style tags of your document, compiles them using sass.js and injects the compiled CSS back into the document.

CSS Builder
Live CSS editing tool to fiddle with various CSS properties including shadows, border-radius, filters, typography, and lots more.

MVP.css
A minimalist stylesheet for HTML elements. No class names, no frameworks, just semantic HTML and you're done.

tailwindcss-standalone
Standalone build of Tailwind CSS that runs in the browser. I'm assuming the idea here is that you don't need a build process to use it.

Buttono
A flexible Sass mixin for creating BEM-style buttons.

CSS Specificity Calculator
Interactive tool to better understand CSS specificity. Provides a specificity score along with number of IDs, classes, and element selectors used. Also allows deep linking to whatever selector you enter.

glaze
CSS-in-JS micro-library for making design systems approachable.

JavaScript Utilities

ES6 for Everyone by Wes Bos is 50% Off!
The master package includes 77 HD videos, part of 21 modules – and course updates are free forever.   promoted 

Flip
A nice looking flip-animation timer component that you can add to your website to include a countdown (e.g. for a product launch).

ASScroll
A hybrid smooth scroll setup that combines the performance gains of virtual scroll with the reliability of native scroll. See the two example links in the readme for a demo, which is pretty cool but definitely not for every project.

prerender.js
Another option to preload links before the user clicks them.

Universal Model
A unified state management solution for Angular, React, Svelte, and Vue.

Zod
TypeScript-first schema validation with static type inference.

Prerender
Allows your JavaScript website to be crawled perfectly by search engines. This tool renders the JavaScript in a browser, saves the static HTML, and you return that to the crawlers.

gretchen
Making fetch happen in TypeScript.

sort-isostring
A tiny (110B) and fast utility to sort ISO 8601 date strings.

uid
A tiny (134B) and fast utility to generate randomized output strings of fixed length using lowercase alphanumeric characters.

Checkboxland
Peak weirdness here. A JavaScript library for rendering anything as HTML checkboxes. Yes, that's right.

Routine
An inline, promise-based wrapper around Web Workers.

Build Tools, Bundlers, etc.

Advanced React & GraphQL by Wes Bos is 50% Off!
The master package includes 68 HD videos, part of 10 modules – and course updates are free forever.   promoted 

npm Dependency Visualizer
Enter the name of any npm package and this tool will display a visual showing its dependencies.

Pipedream
An integration platform built for developers. Develop any workflow, based on any trigger. Workflows are code, which you can run for free. No server or cloud resources to manage.

Rome
An experimental JavaScript toolchain. A compiler, linter, formatter, bundler, testing framework, and more.

Destiny
Prettier for File Structures. Scans a folder for all the files in it and creates a graph based on how the JavaScript/TypeScript files import each other.

Prettier
The popular code formatting tool is now at version 2.

Worth It
Enter a URL and this tool will analyze a page to determine how much less JavaScript is downloaded in modern browsers as a result of it using the module/nomodule pattern.

rollup.js
The popular module bundler for JavaScript apps is now at version 2+.

scriptlint
Enforceable standards for your package.json scripts – like ESLint for npm run. The idea here is to o enable people to use memorable and consistent script names across their projects.

Tray.io
Quickly integrate software applications using powerful automated workflows. Easily build and streamline processes using a beautifully designed visual workflow editor.

Unminify
Free online tool to unminify (unpack, deobfuscate) JavaScript, CSS, and HTML code, making it readable and pretty.

A Tweet for Thought

Kent C. Dodds provides a JavaScript quick tip that uses destructuring but it's interesting to read the many responses in the thread. I tend to be on the side of the responders in cases like this. Sometimes clever code is not readable or maintainable code.
 

Send Me Your Tools!

Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email.
 

Before I Go...

Bizarrely, someone has created a project that aims to name each of the web's 16.7 million colors: colornames.org. I guess with so much remote time on our hands, this is as good a time as any to attempt this.

Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading!

Keep tooling,
Louis
webtoolsweekly.com
@WebToolsWeekly
PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly




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Web Tools #353 - Vue Tools, Databases, Mobile Tools

Web Tools Weekly

Issue #353 • April 23, 2020

The following intro is a paid product review for AnnounceKit, a hosted changelog or product update service that provides a communication channel between your product and end-users.

What's the best way to inform your users that your product has been updated? This is important especially with web apps that are able to update behind the scenes and users are often left in the dark on what's new.

Of course, if a user wants to know what's new, they can check GitHub or look for the product's social media channels. But how much better if your product's updates are integrated into the web app itself. That's where AnnounceKit comes in.

 
AnnounceKit: A product updates and changelog service


AnnounceKit allows you to add posts that are hosted at a location like "changelog.example.com". That location holds a series of updates that itemize your product's changes, and they're searchable and filterable by category, as shown in the following single post example:

 
A single product update, categorized and filterable
 

Posts can be created using a WYSIWYG editor that includes ability to add styles, embed video, and an option to label your post according to some predefined categories:

 
AnnounceKit's WYSIWYG editor for posts
 

You can integrate different types of widgets within your app to notify users of changes and updates. The widgets point to your posts, as shown above. One of the widgets offered is the animated Count Badge Widget that triggers a dropdown on click:

 
AnnounceKit's Count Badge Widget


There's also a Sidebar Widget that opens when the user clicks something like a "What's New" link:

 
AnnounceKit's Sidebar Widget
 

In addition, there's a widget you can embed directly into a page (like the sidebar or footer of your app), displaying product updates in blog list format:

 
AnnounceKit's Embed Widget
 

AnnounceKit also gives you the ability to integrate with popular apps you already use like GitHub, Slack, Twitter, and lots more. These integrations allow you to quickly and easily push out product announcements and changes.

 
AnnounceKit integrates with apps you already use
 

Other features available in AnnounceKit include the ability to:
 

  • Collect user feedback about updates
  • Enable users to sign up for email notifications on changes
  • Send different updates to different users via Segmentation
  • Publish in multiple languages
  • And lots more

Because I write this newsletter, I deal with a lot of tool websites. And I can tell you from experience that it's often difficult to find out when a product was last updated and what those updates were added. A service like AnnounceKit removes that hurdle so everyone is up to date and the updates are easy to find and integrated into your application.

AnnounceKit offers a 30-day trial for the highest tier as well as a free-forever version that's useful for trying out the basics, or if you don't need any of the advanced features.

As a promotion for this issue, AnnounceKit is offering 20% off their "Startup" plan. Just use discount code WEBTOOLSWEEKLY. So check out AnnounceKit if you're in the market for an easy-to-integrate changelog for your product or service.
 

Now on to this week's tools!
 

Vue Tools

vue-agile
A carousel component for Vue inspired by the Slick carousel. Simple, touch-friendly, and no other dependencies.

Vue Dynamic Forms
An easy way to dynamically create reactive forms in Vue based on varying business and regulatory requirements of your site or app.

vue-mention
A @mention and #hashtag component for inputs and textareas.

Pdfvuer
Now at version 1.5. A PDF viewer for Vue using Mozilla's PDF.js.

Vue I18n
An internationalization plugin for Vue with a simple API and includes support for translation and localization (e.g. pluralization, number, date/time, etc).

@xstate/vue
Vue version of XState, a library for creating, interpreting, and executing finite state machines and statecharts.

swrv
Stale-while-revalidate data fetching for Vue.

vue-lazy-hydration
A renderless Vue.js component to improve estimated input latency and time to interactive of server-side rendered Vue applications.

vue-adaptive-utils
Inspired by react-adaptive-hooks, a collection of Vue 3.0 composition API functions and utilities to allow your apps to adapt your user's Network conditions,  battery status, etc.

Vue Formulate
The easiest way to build forms using Vue. Field validation, file uploads, form generation, help text, error messages, placeholders and more.

JSON, Databases, GraphQL, etc.

Advanced React & GraphQL by Wes Bos is 50% Off!
The master package includes 68 HD videos, part of 10 modules – and updates to the course are free forever.   promoted 

Falcon
A free, open-source SQL editor with inline data visualization. Supports connecting to RedShift, MySQL, PostgreSQL, IBM DB2, Impala, MS SQL, Oracle, SQLite, and more.

jsonbox.io
Now at version 2+. Free HTTP-based JSON storage.

Verify JSON
Library to verify JSON structure easily using a lightweight JSON schema syntax.

TerminusDB
A database built for data people. A model-driven graph database designed specifically for the web.

IndexedDB with Usability
Now at version 5+. A tiny library that mostly mirrors the IndexedDB API, but with small improvements that make a big difference to usability.

graphql-api-starter
A starter kit for projects using TypeScript, Express.js, and Apollo GraphQL.

Vendure
A modern, headless GraphQL-based e-commerce framework built with TypeScript and Node.

gqless
A GraphQL client without queries. Auto-generates GraphQL queries based on the data your application consumes.

heliosRX
A front-end Object-Relational Mapping layer for reactive real-time web applications using Firebase Realtime Database.

Mobile Tools and React Native

ES6 for Everyone by Wes Bos is 50% Off!
The master package includes 77 HD videos, part of 21 modules – and updates to the course are free forever.   promoted 

hamburger-react
Animated hamburger menu icons for React. CSS-driven transitions, created to be as elegant and performant as possible.

react-native-design-system
A set of design rules and component library that lets you prototype faster with easy to use cross-platform components.

Draftbit
Early access. Build your app, visually. Create, customize, and launch mobile apps all from your browser. Source code included.

react-native-mmkv-storage
An efficient, small and encrypted mobile key-value storage framework for React Native.

Pep
Turn your website into a fast, installable Progressive Web App (PWA) instantly.

StorePreviewer
Preview what your mobile app will look like in the iOS App Store. Just type the details and see the live preview.

React Native Web Template
Template project for creating iOS, Android, and Web apps with React Native.

Hyperview
A new hypermedia format and React Native client for developing server-driven mobile apps.

Bravo Studio
Turn Figma prototypes into native iOS and Android apps instantly with no code.

React Native Material UI
Highly customizable Material Design components for React Native.

A Tweet for Thought

Here's a good thread from Fran Swaine on how to avoid burnout while freelancing.
 

Send Me Your Tools!

Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email.
 

Before I Go...

Phuoc Nguyen, who I featured a few issues back with his great project called HTML DOM, has built another great project called 1loc – a categorized list of vanilla JavaScript one-liners.

Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading!

Keep tooling,
Louis
webtoolsweekly.com
@WebToolsWeekly
PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly




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Web Tools #354 - React Tools, Image/Video Tools, Uncats

Web Tools Weekly

Issue #354 • April 30, 2020

>&campaign_id=02f2bef915&device=desktop&v=0.14" style="width: 100%;max-width: 600px;border: 0;height: auto;line-height: 100%;outline: none;text-decoration: none;-ms-interpolation-mode: bicubic;" width="600">

In previous tips I introduced a basic HTML Drag and Drop API example along with some things you can do with the dataTransfer() object. This tip will focus on the different events you can listen for during a drag operation.

There are 7 drag events that are supported across all modern browsers. They are:

  • dragstart - A dragging operation begins (on dragged item)
  • drag - A drag operation is in process (on dragged item)
  • dragenter - A dragged item enters a valid drop target (on drop target)
  • dragover - A valid drop target is dragged over (on drop target)
  • dragleave - A dragged item leaves a valid drop target (on drop target)
  • drop - A dragged item is dropped on a valid drop target (on drop target)
  • dragend - A drag operation ends (on dragged item)
The notes in parentheses next to each bullet point indicate where the event listener would be placed when listening for the event.

As usual, this is always more interesting with an interactive example, so here's a CodePen demo that illustrates all 7 drag events by printing each one on the page as the event occurs. Some events, of course, occur simultaneously. Also, in order to see the dragleave event, you have to 'leave' the drop target before entering it again to complete the drop.

The demo displays each message once but it should be noted that the drag and dragover events fire continuously while the item is dragged or while the drop target is being dragged over. The rest of the events occur one time each then won't occur again until another drag operation is initiated, ended, or another drop target is accessed, etc.

It should also be noted that MDN's article that lists the different events also lists a dragexit event that has some browser support. But it's recommended to use the dragleave event (which is apparently the equivalent) instead.
 

Now on to this week's tools!

React Tools

>&campaign_id=02f2bef915&device=desktop&v=0.14" style="padding-bottom: 12px;max-width: 568px;border: 0;height: auto;line-height: 100%;outline: none;text-decoration: none;-ms-interpolation-mode: bicubic;" width="568">
Enform
Handle React forms with joy. Helps you manage form validation, dirty form submission and reset, field values and changes, and error messages.

react-letter
A React component that allows for an easy display of HTML e-mail content with automatic sanitization. Support for features should match what is supported by Gmail.

useCustomHook
A starter template for creating a new React Hook.

react-easy-state
Simple React state management made with ES6 Proxies.

Crank.js
Write JSX-driven components with functions, promises, and generators. uses the same JSX syntax and diffing algorithm popularized by React, allowing you to write HTML-like code directly in your JavaScript.

use-scroll-to-bottom
React Hook that uses IntersectionObserver to detect when the user has scrolled to the bottom of the page.

React Cool Portal
A React hook for Portals that helps you render children (e.g. modals, dropdowns, tooltips, etc) into a DOM node that exists outside the DOM hierarchy of the parent component.

React State Selector
Performant, type safe and easy to use React global state manager.

React Table
Now at version 7+. Hooks for building lightweight, fast and extendable data grids for React.

react-curved-arrow
Use nice curvy arrows in your React project. Great for interactive tutorials and product tours.

react-enroute
Now at version 4+. React router with a small footprint for modern browsers.

codelift
A "No Code" GUI for your React app.
50% Off Courses by Wes Bos (Master Packages!):
 
 

Media Tools (SVG, Audio, Video, etc.)

British Museum Collection
The British Museum has released 1.9 million images, most with a CC 4.0 license.

Rickshaw
A JavaScript toolkit for creating interactive time series graphs.

Trianglify
Algorithmically generated triangle art that you can render in a project using a simple API, or generate and download using the online tool.

Plotly.js
Built on top of D3.js and stack.gl, a high-level, declarative charting library with over 40 chart types, including scientific charts, 3D graphs, statistical charts, SVG maps, financial charts, and more.

Image Cropper
A quick and easy way to resize any image (PNG, JPG, SVG, GIF, and WEBP supported).

PicsArt Photo Editor
More than a dozen online photo editing tools including duotone effects, overlays, filters, background editing, and more.

BlurHash
A compact representation of a placeholder for an image. Replace boring grey boxes with beautiful states for your placeholders.

Image Compare Viewer
A vanilla JavaScript, dependency-free component that adds an interactive image diff viewer to any page. The on page demos are pretty cool!

OpenJSCAD.org
A set of modular, browser and command line tools for creating parametric 2D & 3D designs with JavaScript code.

Vime
Open source video player library focused on giving users and developers the best possible media player experience. Supports HTML5, Dash, YouTube, Vimeo, and Dailymotion.

Mixkit Music
Free stock music clips that are royalty-free for commercial projects.

The Uncategorizables

Exchange Rates API
A simple and lightweight free service for current and historical foreign exchange rates.

Amazon AppFlow
A fully managed integration service that enables you to securely transfer data between SaaS apps like Salesforce, Marketo, Slack, and ServiceNow, and AWS services like Amazon S3, in just a few clicks.

Digital Brain
Auto-generates your basic documentation and then provides a beautiful, fast, and collaborative interface for your team to complete your documentation process.

Permanent.org
A new non-profit, secure cloud storage service with a focus on privacy that offers a free gigabyte to start.

Flow
A fast, secure, and developer-friendly blockchain built to support the next generation of games, apps, and the digital assets that power them.

Phelia
A reactive Slack application framework. Build interactive Slack apps without webhooks or JSON headache. If you know React, you know how to make a Slack app.

hCaptcha
A drop-in replacement for reCAPTCHA (you can switch within minutes) that protects user privacy, rewards websites, and helps companies get their data labeled.

markmap-lib
Visualize your Markdown with mindmaps.

Plausible
Simple and privacy-friendly alternative to Google Analytics. A lightweight and open-source site analytics tool that doesn’t use cookies and is fully compliant with GDPR, CCPA, and PECR.

Public APIs
A collection of free public APIs for software developers, categorized.

A Tweet for Thought

Technology has changed the way we behave, as this thread demonstrates.
 

Got a Tool Suggestion?

Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email.
 

Before I Go...

If you're a big Seinfeld fan like I am, you'll love this: Seinfeld Adventure. Right now it's just a pitch for a game. I seriously doubt Jerry and his producers will approve this, but it's pretty cool to see what it would be like to play "a game about nothing".

Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading!

Keep tooling,
Louis
webtoolsweekly.com
@WebToolsWeekly
PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly
WTW on YouTube




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Web Tools #355 - Frameworks, Testing Tools, JS Utilities

Web Tools Weekly

Issue #355 • May 7, 2020

Promotion
123FormBuilder Gold Plan: Lifetime Subscription
For a one-time fee of $39.99 (usually $299.88/year) ‬you get a lifetime subscription to the gold plan (20 forms/month, 5000 submissions/month). A web-based form and survey builder with a no-code drag-and-drop editor, 1000+ form templates, integration with Google Sheets, MailChimp, Dropbox, and more.
Check it Out Here

When creating interfaces using HTML's Drag and Drop API (various aspects of which I've covered in recent issues), it's important to note that some elements on a web page are already 'draggable' by default. And you've no doubt noticed this. The spec explains that the following elements are draggable by default:

  • A text selection
  • An image
  • An `a` element with an `href` attribute
Every element on the page that doesn't explicitly have the draggable attribute set has a draggable value of "auto". But that doesn't mean you can check for a value of "auto". As the spec says, if an element's draggable attribute is not set to either true or false:

"...the element's draggable content attribute has the state auto. If the element is an img element, an object element that represents an image, or an a element with an href content attribute, the draggable IDL attribute must return true; otherwise, the draggable IDL attribute must return false."

In other words, the browser will automatically set the draggable value to true or false based on what kind of element it is. Try this CodePen demo to see the effect in action. Notice a few things in the demo:

  • No draggable attributes on the three elements
  • I'm using the Window.getSelection() method to get the selected text after the drag operation begins
  • I'm using preventDefault() when the drop is made to ensure the browser doesn't think something suspicious is happening. If I didn't include this, you'd see a warning before the browser tries to navigate to whatever you drag.
Try selecting any one of the three colors in full, or even a portion of the text in those colors to find another valid color value (e.g. "Pink" inside the color "HotPink"). Notice the background of the dropzone will change accordingly.
As a side point, you can select any random piece of text on that page and you'll see the browser try to figure out what to do with the text if you drop it onto the dropzone. This is similar to dragging an image (which is naturally draggable) into a new page and then the browser visits the URL of that image.

BTW - if you like these kinds of JavaScript tips, you'll love my e-books bundle.
 

Now on to this week's tools!
 

Front-end Frameworks

A No-Code Drag and Drop Form Builder
Get a lifetime membership to 123FormBuilder's Gold plan for a one-time fee of $39.99 (usually $299.88/year). 20 forms/month, 5000 submissions/month, 1000+ form templates, integration with Google Sheets, MailChimp, Dropbox, and more.  promoted 

HTML / Sass Jumpstart
Minimal, themeable, and scalable Sass/HTML template site. Powered by node-sass and includes stylelint, Prettier, and Autoprefixer, hot-reload via Browsersync.

H3
A microframework to build client-side single-page applications (SPAs) in modern JavaScript.

Fast Cart
A Woocommerce PWA platform for building fast loading, mobile-friendly e-commerce websites.

98.css
A CSS library for building retro interfaces that look like Windows 98.

Shorthand
A utility-based CSS framework that allows you to make unique and modern designs without writing any CSS.

Reactron
A tiny Electron project configured to work with React as the front end. The project has the minimum code necessary to start a new app.

Orbit
An open source design system that includes a whole slew of components and utilities for use in your next travel-based app or website.

vue-composable
General purpose Vue Composition API composable and reactive components written in TypeScript.

Hook
A dark HTML landing page template built with the aforementioned Shorthand CSS framework.

LitElement Starter Template
A minimal starter template for a web components app built with LitElement, TypeScript, and Parcel for bundling.

Reach UI
A set of React components to build accessible React-based design systems.

Testing and Debugging Tools

ES6 for Everyone by Wes Bos is 50% Off!
The master package includes 77 HD videos, part of 21 modules – and course updates are free forever.   promoted 

Eruda
Now at version 2+. A console for testing and debugging on mobile browsers.

CursedChrome
This can be used for malicious purposes, so be wary. A Chrome-extension implant that turns victim Chrome browsers into fully-functional HTTP proxies, allowing you to browse sites as your victims.

postMessage-tracker
A Chrome extension to track postMessage usage (URL, domain, and stack) both by logging using CORS and also visually as an extension icon.

Tempomat
Native macOS app for monitoring continuous integration systems.

Will it CORS?
Test if a URL is CORS friendly (i.e. it's safe to send and the response can be read).

Pointer Latency
Tests the delay of pointermove events in the current web browser and demonstrates the usefulness/uselessness of pointer prediction.

axios
A well-known tool but I've never included it here. A Promise-based HTTP client for the browser and Node.

FinDOM-XSS
A fast and simple DOM based XSS vulnerability scanner via a Shell script.

EventReduce Browser Demo
A browser demo where the EventReduce algorithm is used in different browser databases so you can test out the performance gains of different queries.

Insomnia
Now at version 7+. API design platform plus REST and GraphQL client.

JavaScript Utilities

Advanced React & GraphQL by Wes Bos is 50% Off!
The master package includes 68 HD videos, part of 10 modules – and course updates are free forever.   promoted 

emoji-regex
A regular expression to match all Emoji-only symbols as per the Unicode Standard.

Hegel
An advanced static type checker for JavaScript with optional type annotations and is able to prevent runtime type errors.

Rosetta
A general purpose internationalization library in 292 bytes.

SAMD
A tiny, static AMD API implementation that allows including AMD modules in regular script tags.

Flipswitch.js
Pure ES6 library for clipping fixed positioned elements on scroll.

useMemoValue()
Reuse the previous version of a value unless it has changed.

Notyf
A small (~3KB) JavaScript library for toast notifications. Responsive, accessible, dependency-free, and easy to integrate with React, Angular and Vue.

gen-esm-wrapper
CLI tool that makes it easier for module authors to support both ES modules and CommonJS modules for Node.js.

prray
'Promisified' Array, compatible with normal arrays, but comes with support for async methods (e.g. mapAsync).

qrcode-generator
QR code generator implementation in JavaScript, Java, and more.

A Tweet for Thought

In case you wanted to know how long it takes to load your Twitter timeline over a real 56k connection.
 

Send Me Your Tools!

Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email.
 

Before I Go...

Miss the office? Say no more.

Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading!

Keep tooling,
Louis
webtoolsweekly.com
@WebToolsWeekly
PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly




too

Silence: a social history of one of the least understood elements of our lives / Jane Brox

Browsery BJ1499.S5 B76 2019





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Teaching with digital humanities: tools and methods for nineteenth-century American literature / edited by Jennifer Travis and Jessica DeSpain

Hayden Library - PS44.T43 2019




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An Essential Tool for Capturing Your Career Accomplishments

Imagine you’re ready to apply for your next job. Like most busy professionals, you probably haven’t updated your résumé or your portfolio since you looked for your current job. 

Now you need to update both, and you can’t remember what work you’ve done over the past few years. (In fact, you can barely remember what you’ve done over the past few months!)

So you scramble to update your résumé with new content. Then you spend all weekend scraping together a new portfolio using screenshots of whatever work evidence you can find on your laptop. You submit the résumé and portfolio with your application, hoping you didn’t forget to include any major career milestones you achieved over the last few years. 

This is the process most of us use to approach our job search. We wait until we’re ready to find a job, panic at our lack of résumé and portfolio, and pull together a “good enough” version of each for the job application. (Trust me, I’ve done this many times myself.)

This is a stressful and ineffective way to approach a job search. There’s a much better approach you can take—and you can start working on it now, even if you’re not on the job market.

The Career Management Document

A Career Management Document (CMD) is a comprehensive collection of your résumé and portfolio content. It’s a document you update regularly, over time, with all the work you’ve done. 

When you’re ready to apply for your next job, you’ll have all the résumé and portfolio pieces available in your CMD. All you need to do is assemble those pieces into résumé and portfolio documents, then send the documents off with your job application.

I update my CMD about once a week. I start by reviewing evidence of my recent work. I review Slack messages, Basecamp posts, emails, and any other current work-related content. I write my accomplishments in the format of résumé bullets, using the framework of responsibilities and accomplishments from this Manager Tools podcast. Then I add those bullets to the CMD. 

Here are some examples from my CMD:

  • Coached a student on writing a stronger portfolio story to showcase their advanced UX skills, resulting in the student getting a job interview.
  • Facilitated an end-of-study analysis in under 90 minutes to help the team synthesize user research data from 12 participants.
  • Led a remote retrospective with teams in two offices, developed actionable takeaways, and ended on time despite a delayed start.

My CMD has several hundred résumé bullets, and it continues to grow. I organize content by year and by project. Within each project are responsibilities and accomplishments.

I add any content to the CMD that might go into my résumé someday. I include everything I can think of, even if it seems insignificant or trivial at the time. 

For example, I sometimes help with social media marketing at Center Centre, the UX design school where I’m a faculty member. I include it in my CMD. I don’t plan to pursue social media marketing as a career, but it may be relevant to a future job. Who knows—I may apply to work for an organization that makes social media marketing software someday. In that case, my social media experience could be relevant.

Include portfolio artifacts with your CMD

In addition to capturing bullets for my résumé, I capture content for my portfolio. Each week, I gather screenshots of my work, photos of me working with the team, and any other artifacts I can find. I store them in an organized system I can reference later. 

I also take brief notes about the work I did and store them with the artifacts. That way, if I look back at these materials a year from now, I’ll have notes about what I did during the project, reminding me of the details.

For example, after I facilitated a user research analysis session late last year, I captured evidence of it for my portfolio. I included photos of the whiteboard where I recorded public notes during the session. I also captured brief notes about who attended the session, the date, and when it took place during the project. 

You can use whatever tools you’d like to gather evidence of your work. I use Google Docs for the résumé portion of my CMD. I use Dropbox to store my portfolio artifacts. I create Dropbox folders with dates and project names that correspond to the contents of my CMD.


Résumé content from my CMD. I wrote about coaching a student on crafting a presentation for her job interview. The highlighted areas are where I left comments reminding me of the details of the work. Note that some of the résumé bullets seem redundant, which is OK. When I create my next résumé, I’ll choose the most appropriate bullets.

I took notes on a whiteboard while coaching the student. I stored a photo of the whiteboard in Dropbox in a folder named with the date of the work and a description of what I did.

The key is to collect the evidence regularly and store it in an accessible, organized way that works for you. To know if you’re storing work evidence effectively, ask yourself, “Will I understand this CMD content a year from now based on how I’m capturing and storing it today?” If the answer is “yes,” you’re in good shape.

Update your CMD regularly

For the CMD to work when you need it, it needs to be comprehensive and up-to-date. As I mentioned before, I update my CMD once a week. I schedule thirty minutes on my calendar each week so I remember to do it. 

Sometimes I have a busy week, and I can’t spend thirty minutes on my CMD. So I spend whatever amount of time I have. Some weeks, I only spend ten minutes. Ten minutes per week is better than zero minutes per week. 

Occasionally, I don’t get a chance to update it because my week is so hectic. That’s OK because I’ll probably get to it the following week. 

I recommend updating your CMD once a week and not once a month or once a quarter. If you wait even a month, you’ll have trouble remembering what you did three and a half weeks ago. Even worse, if you schedule a CMD update once a month and then miss it, you won’t get to it until the next month. That means you have to think back and remember two months of work, which is hard to do. 

Updating your CMD every week, while the work is fresh in your mind, gets the best results.

The CMD benefits you in additional ways

The CMD can help you prepare for your job search beyond your résumé and your portfolio. 

You can use it to prepare for a job interview. Since you’re capturing work evidence from each stage of the process in your CMD, you can use that evidence to remember what you did throughout a project. Then, you can craft a story about your role on that project. 

Hiring managers love to hear stories about your work during job interviews. For instance, if you’re a designer, they want to know the journey you took during your design process, from the start of a project to the end. A detailed CMD will help you remember this process so you can share it in an interview. 

I’ve even used my CMD to write blog posts. I’ve been blogging regularly for the past two years, and I often refer to my CMD to remember work experience I had that’s relevant to what I’m writing. When I wrote the article “How to Tell Compelling Stories During a UX Job Interview,” I used my CMD to remember interview preparation exercises I did with students. 

The CMD can also help you track work accomplishments for your quarterly or annual performance reviews. Additionally, you can use it to write job ads when hiring for related roles on your team.

Lastly, I find it rewarding to peruse my CMD now and then, especially when I look back at work I did over a year ago. The CMD serves as a record of all my professional accomplishments. This record helps me appreciate my professional growth because I see how far my skills have come over time.

Learn more about the CMD from Manager Tools

At Center Centre, we originally learned about the Career Management Document through the Manager Tools podcast series.

Manager Tools’ podcasts explain how to use a CMD for your résumé. We expanded their approach to include portfolio work as well. I recommend listening to their podcasts about creating and maintaining your CMD:

Prepare for your next job search now

We tell our students at Center Centre that preparing for your next job search is a process that starts early. It’s like saving for retirement—the sooner you start saving money, the more likely you are to be prepared when the time comes. 

Similarly, collecting résumé and portfolio content ahead of time will prepare you to find your next job whenever you’re ready to do so. It also prepares you for a sudden job termination like an unexpected layoff. If you lose your job without warning, you’ll likely be under a lot of stress to find a new position. Having a CMD ready will relieve the additional stress of building a résumé and portfolio from scratch. 

If you don’t have a CMD yet, now is a great time to start one. Schedule 30 minutes this week to begin crafting your repository of work accomplishments. You’ll be glad you did when you seek your next job.




too

Elon Musk intends to sell all physical possessions, says Tesla stock price too high

Tesla chief Elon Musk said that he was "selling almost all physical possessions" and would no longer own a home and would devote himself to Mars and Earth.




too

In a City Frozen in Fear, Time Freezes, Too

Unusually clear skies, sunny days and empty parks beckon, but in a city locked down by the coronavirus, almost no one is heeding their call.




too

Expeditions unpacked: what the great explorers took into the unknown / Ed Stafford

Dewey Library - G200.S727 2019




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Techniques, tools and methodologies applied to global supply chain ecosystems / Jorge Luis García-Alcaraz, Cuauhtémoc Sánchez-Ramírez, Liliana Avelar-Sosa, Giner Alor-Hernández, editors

Online Resource




too

Sustainable business performance and risk management: risk assessment tools in the context of business risk levels related to threats and opportunities / Ruxandra Maria Bejinariu

Online Resource




too

Applied solid mechanics. edited by A.S. Tooth and J. Spence

Online Resource




too

Product development: principles and tools for creating desirable and transferable designs / Christopher A. Mattson, Carl D. Sorensen

Online Resource




too

Applied computational fluid dynamics and turbulence modeling: practical tools, tips and techniques / Sal Rodriguez

Online Resource




too

Positive displacement machines: modern design innovations and tools / [edited by] Ibrahim A. Sultan, Truong H. Phung

Online Resource




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XV International Scientific-Technical Conference "Dynamic of Technical Systems" (DTS-2019): 11-13 September 2019, Rostov-on-Don, Russia / Editors: Vladimir Mladenovic, Pham Dinh Tung, Igor B. Sevostyanov, Tooraj Abbasian Najafabadi and Marko Pet

Online Resource




too

Lyman-alpha as an astrophysical and cosmological tool: Saas-Fee Advanced Course 46 / Mark Dijkstra, J. Xavier Prochaska, Masami Ouchi, Matthew Hayes ; Swiss Society for Astrophysics and Astronomy ; edited by Anne Verhamme, Pierre North, Sebastiano Cantalu

Online Resource




too

Open Source Intelligence Methods and Tools: A Practical Guide to Online Intelligence / by Nihad A. Hassan, Rami Hijazi

Online Resource




too

Progress in performance management: industry insights and case studies on principles, application tools, and practice / Marc Helmold and Warda Samara

Online Resource




too

Big B feels Resul Pookutty gives him too much credit

Megastar Amitabh Bachchan says Oscar-winning sound artiste Resul Pookutty gives him more credit than he deserves.




too

The ape that understood the universe: how the mind and culture evolve / Steve Stewart-Williams, University of Nottingham

Hayden Library - BF698.95.S745 2018




too

Research methods: a tool for life / Bernard C. Beins

Hayden Library - BF76.5.B439 2018




too

If I understood you, would I have this look on my face?: my adventures in the art and science of relating and communicating / Alan Alda

Hayden Library - BF637.C45 A424 2017




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New O*NET-SOC Taxonomy Transition Tools within O*NET Web Services

With the release of the O*NET 25.1 Database in November 2020, O*NET Web Services will transition to the O*NET-SOC 2019 taxonomy. This taxonomy, based on the 2018 SOC, introduces several changes to the occupations returned by our services. It includes 1,016 occupational titles, 923 of which represent O*NET data-level occupations. For more information on these changes, see the O*NET-SOC Taxonomy page at the O*NET Resource Center.

To help O*NET Web Services users with the upcoming taxonomy transition, Taxonomy Services are now available to enable developers to connect occupational data between existing systems based on the O*NET-SOC 2010 taxonomy, and the future O*NET-SOC 2019 taxonomy-based O*NET Web Services.




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Bulleit Proof: How I Took a 150-Year-Old Family Recipe and a Revolver, and Disrupted the Entire Liquor Industry One Bottle, One Sip, One Handshake at a Time


 

The compelling story of how one man took a 150-year-old family recipe and disrupted the entire liquor industry one sip, one bottle, one handshake at a time

Tom Bulleit stood on a stage before a thousand people inside a tent the size of a big-top. It was both his thirtieth wedding anniversary and his birthday. But there was another thing to celebrate: the dedication of the new Bulleit Distillery in Shelbyville, Kentucky. His great-great-grandfather,



Read More...




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Programming and Performance Visualization Tools (ProTools), IEEE/ACM International Workshop on [electronic journal].

IEEE / Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Incorporated




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Proceedings 14th IEEE International Conference on Tools with Artificial Intelligence (ICTAI 2002) [electronic journal].

IEEE Computer Society




too

2019 IEEE/ACM International Workshop on Programming and Performance Visualization Tools (ProTools) [electronic journal].

IEEE / Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Incorporated




too

2019 IEEE/ACM International Workshop on Programming and Performance Visualization Tools (ProTools) [electronic journal].

IEEE / Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Incorporated




too

2019 IEEE 31st International Conference on Tools with Artificial Intelligence (ICTAI) [electronic journal].

IEEE / Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Incorporated




too

2016 5th Workshop on Extreme-Scale Programming Tools (ESPT) [electronic journal].

IEEE / Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Incorporated




too

2012 IEEE 24th International Conference on Tools with Artificial Intelligence (ICTAI 2012) [electronic journal].

IEEE Computer Society




too

2005 Workshop on Techniques, Methodologies and Tools for Performance Evaluation of Complex Systems [electronic journal].

IEEE Computer Society




too

16th IEEE International Conference on Tools with Artificial Intelligence [electronic journal].

IEEE Computer Society




too

[ASAP] Regular Solution Theory for Polymer Permeation Transients: A Toolkit for Understanding Experimental Waveshapes

Langmuir
DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.0c00589




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Aptamers: biotechnological applications of a next generation tool / Gulab Singh Yadav, Vikas Kumar, Neeraj K. Aggarwal, editors

Online Resource




too

Who cloned my cat?: fun adventures in biotechnology / Reinhard Renneberg ; cartoonists, Manfred Bofinger and Ming Fai Chow

Online Resource




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This summer, keep that sweet tooth in check